Spot.Us Goes National, Gets Clay Shirky as Sponsor

Anyone that has followed Spot.Us from the beginning knows we’ve tried to remain iterative and agile.
In the earlier stages of Spot.Us I thought this was one of the larger
lessons for journalism-entrepreneurs. I went through the iterative
and agile process and tried to document it so others could repeat. I
hope to continue this tradition as I get ready for an academic fellowship at the Reynolds Journalism Institute.
Indeed, the heart of this post addresses two features of Spot.Us
(expansion and community-focused sponsorships) which will be my focus
while in Missouri.

Inherent to this mindset is the ability to acknowledge missteps and
pivot. There are countless things I believe we’ve done right (pats
self on back); but there are other things where we made the best guesses
we could and upon failure had to pivot. Recently, Spot.Us made one
big pivot and is openly thinking about how to dance around two
remaining problems. Before we analyze those, let’s get to the good
news (pats self on back again, rewards reader with cute kitten photo).

Community-focused sponsorship continues.

We have another community-focused sponsorship, this one made possible by Clay Shirky (how cool is that!).

In this sponsorship we are asking the community questions about
objectivity and journalism. Not only do we reward your time by giving
you control over a part of our budget, but we will release answers to
these questions so that we all may become smarter and learn about what
the Spot.Us community thinks about this subject.

Our most dynamic collaboration ever — covering the Johannes Mehserle trial: This week we published the 40th post in our coverage of the Johannes Mehserle trial.
Mehserle, a former BART police officer, was found guilty of the involuntary manslaughter of Oscar Grant. What was unique and interesting for
Spot.Us about this project was the number of partners that participated.Our pitch had seven different organizations taking part
including Oakland Local, New American Media, California Beat, KALW and
The Bay Citizen. In another era, each organization would have hired
its own reporter and provided competitive (and perhaps overlapping)
coverage. Through Spot.Us we were able to create a ethos of “co-opetition.” We hope to see more pitches like this in the future, and
our hat is off to these organizations who were able to pull it off.

The Treasure Island investigation: Our partners in crime, the SF Public Press, put out a print product recently with an exhaustive spread on Treasure Island. It’s a fantastic look at development in SF from several angles and will be adapted and republished by Shareable.Net this week.

Lessons Learned and Missteps

1. Expansion isn’t clean: A careful observer of Spot.Us would have seen this coming and may
have even noticed the change last week. We have removed the networks on
Spot.Us. We used to say we were based in SF, LA, Seattle,
Minnesota and expanding; we are now open to anyone with a good
local/regional pitch anywhere in the United States.

From the start, I thought Spot.Us would expand a la
Craigslist: Pick locations, create sub-domains and let people
aggregate around them. Certainly San Francisco and Los Angeles have
worked like this. We always have about five active pitches in both
locations at any given time. Seattle however, might not be that way. I
fear I’m viewed as an outsider … But that shouldn’t stop me from expanding. Especially not when I am getting very solid pitches from around the country.

It makes little sense for me to tell a good pitch from
Illinois or Texas that they can’t put their pitch up until we
find a handful of other pitches in their region. So, as of last week, the sub-domains at Spot.Us have been removed. Trying
to convince people in a specific region to use the site — while
stopping others from using it because they aren’t in the right region —
is not the best use of our time or energy.

So the lesson here is really one about internal expectations and
external realities. While in my mind’s eye it still makes sense for
Spot.Us to expand region-by-region, I don’t see this happening anytime
soon. This is not the end of the world. In some respects I find it
freeing. In the end Spot.Us is a platform, not a news organization.
Opening up the platform is a positive endeavor, especially considering
the vast majority of pitches so far have been successful.

The major
misstep then is not making this change sooner. The challenge going
forward is finding a different organizing mechanism so that people can
find pitches that are relevant to them as quickly as possible on our search page without expecting those pitches to be grouped geographically.

2. Letting go isn’t easy: Related to the misstep above is a larger phenomena. Put bluntly I
was a smothering Jewish mother (trust me, I know what these are like).
I think I clung to the “babyness” of the Spot.Us project instead of
letting it go free. It’s natural for anybody who starts something to
hold onto it and fear releasing it into the wild. I’ve tried to avoid
that, but I’m afraid I’ve put Spot.Us into a tough position of wanting
it to expand but also being protective over the pitches that are
uploaded into the site.

There are some pitches I felt very comfortable rejecting. The best
example was a pitch from a Seattle fortune teller that was going to
read people’s future via the Internet and publish on Spot.Us. I feel
justified in saying “that’s not for us.” As a non-profit, we have a
mission to fund local/regional reporting.

At the same time, this tension hasn’t always been easy to
negotiate. Some pitches we get exist in a much more difficult space.
The tension exists between being a site where the founder has authority over what pitches are included, and a site that is
truly open but still filters out pitches that don’t meet our mission. I am not 100 percent sure how we will negotiate that
tension.

For the immediate future, Spot.Us will be a site where I filter
pitches. I will not be filtering pitches based on “credentials” but
rather the topic of the reporting and the earnestness and eagerness of
the reporter. Ideally Spot.Us and its community board members will be
able to come up with a system whereby pitches can be accepted and/or
rejected not at the whim of my decision, but by the community and
its representatives.

In Conclusion

Spot.Us continues to push forward. We’ve had some missteps and some
beautiful moments. I suspect both will happen in the future as well.
The beauty of all this continues to be that both happen in public, and
that it is only with the public’s participation that either can
happen. This remains an experiment in transparency and public control
over the process of journalism. It will continue to be such an
experiment as we move forward.

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Congrats on the national expansion, David! (We are headed in a similar direction soon with MediaBugs.) Thanks for sharing your thinking here—appreciate the clear, detailed look into your process with the project.

Also, one thing in the spirit of MediaBugs

I believe this is a mistake in your post:
“Mehserle, a former BART police officer, was found guilty of the second degree murder of Oscar Grant.”

Mehserle was convicted of involuntary manslaughter. (A lesser charge, at the heart of the post-trial controversy.)

Congratulations David and Spot.Us! Your successes have been many, and serve as an inspiration to other nonprofit news organizations like The Bay Citizen.

http://www.digidave.org David Cohn

@Mark 100% correct – that I made a mistake. I wrote this battling a fever. When the newsletter went out I slapped my face. I think I was re-writing history in my head.

Carole Christie

Thanks, David, for this behind-the-scenes look at the how Spot.Us is moving forward. I love that the stories can be from anywhere now and I think that will create a lot of opportunity for faster growth.

http://Http://journalism.unl.edu Gary Kebbel

Great self annalysis, David. Thanks for sharing it. It’s openness like this that contributes to the success of Spot.us.